e 
NOVEMBER 1l, 1856.] 
THE Kiniad Eea ed Beds | 
727 
their base, something like the runners of sala a Grass, very varying widths, runni mended for this climate. The Cryptomeria 
plant ir quan into numberless larger or ohaler, W “hon peang ica, KOVE, grows perfectly well, ate retains its 
«If so he is a Zo-anthus (‘live flower’), for a plate ws indentations, which bes nares of the| colour thi roughout the season if on a bank 
of which I may refer you to Mr. Gosse’s new prepa a unds that rise on both sides. The Grass is with hern t it is now on place 
Marine Zoology. holly free from any kind of breaks or furniture, entirely in Mr. Bateman’s estimation to the variety 
62, ue these polyps entirely single, not joined i lled Lobbii, whi a h closer and compacter 
ote habit, and keeps its lovely green tint in whatever 
apane is ere bold and gentle, there is ae 
Shot tea in oe; like alien of Mignonette round 
a flower-bed, break in them ? 
“If the former be the case, the specimen i isa Lucer- infini 
and luc: refore 
and the 
6 to 10 or ee t, and their faces diversified with an 
nu cf little | swells and depressions, these 
Golden 
situatio be placed, The Taxodium ARAN 
virens, too, has alwa; eik NA D , and there 
Changing i in lamy by ti he softest undulations, from | many fine young plants 
After the Arinia iat the Deodars, a patch of 
Yews na Aers is — on the rit Ps of 
roduce 
ucerna means fa lamp, 
ae 
T: 
mo s, to pr 
g, or r Heather, the brownish tint and w 
f 
siaii g 
round the creature, like lights i in a chande! 
ild 
hi admirable eet areni for 
tribe. A group of Pinus austriaca and its congeners read 
“If his tentacles are in lar eireles, he belongs | the various greens peculiar to the foliage of the Coni- | follows, ided effects, 
to the ‘family’ of the etin j or ‘si ams ’—a | ferous family ; aaa paler shades being thrown out Specimens of this no are grow ving on the very 
name which forcibly reeals the animal wher ou _ [eoret acm me cases, by a further background of | nee of the mounds, in ‘the ost ex es ge and 
him out of the cool se of his rock-pool, and every | Ye ts extreme hardiness, with the massive and sturdy 
tentacle shot out its many-coloured lights sarii the | Bateman’s idea—doubtl = assumes, render it quite invaluable in any 
pink corallines and the dark tresses of the ttre um is a most irregular series of “groups of the -praris district. Mr. Bateman has likewise ex- 
And e goes on. same or kin dred pow of Conifers ; and he has placed | perienced it to be an excellent plant for moving, ne 
ader does learn a god by for the double purpose of rendering | having lost a single ARE: althoug zh some of 
this book than what a Sea-Anemon hi _be these _Broups more picturesque, and of bringing et in height. 
ingly surprised. sp especially is it Pinus excelsa and its innvew stand at the point of 
J b praam cted cranium, Itis |tor and the sky, without any anon background, | the mounds where the * walk begins to en rn to the wii 
illustrated by half a d lh variety in the sh dheight of the r d ao a particularly open and wind, 
This appears, however, ‘only to wen the 
“reer "oetik Book. By Geo. Glenny. 
ame Cox, Kin; Street, Covent Garden, ` 
which any particular species may duinak imen the 
carpet of Heather, by its colour, and by its naturalness, | grou 
y 
It. i ht 288 pages of wer pen 
nged in double colu umns. Under each 
once, in — nce, to 
their native hills, while, unlike bare earth o! r Grass, it 
feet hi 
anii their habit. P. monticola ane n this 
group, and pee produ ced cones, though only about six 
high. 
as hardy as Ph excelsa, The Weymouth Pine, which 
he management of the pleas 
he flower wee vegetable 
garden, th 
ure ground and s Seaabbery, 
‘garden, the orchard and 
t beaut 
s 
—_ formation of th 
are none of them much 
system of g 
agree of jiita about the p 
regular in ren ervals on a flat 
oe ying, Noth 
ful than the grou; 
lants at com atively 
riasan is most Aer sepa 
ing of the ‘kind co ore 
roups of Deodars and. 
| of 
be m produc 
pelo 
Ayaeahuite and P. Lambertiana, of the 
= anted in a shaded place, and are 
and 
ed by mrt rapengen nab 
eed Fe ighbo phase 
information it furnishes, i it will 
mayor a 
se the way a 
whom such a month 
boon. We re; 
appears to mae been paid to the proper s 
botanical names, ha Arpa a 
ring throughou 
y rememb: rancer must prove 
its pages. 
Mr. Smith has jus prin Catalogue of the 
a real|P 
gret Nairn to add that little attention th 
int b end pans a Ipae themsel 
or by Yew trees 
even to} the 
u 
` 
iy tastigiato: lal hah bit. 
int 
d 
ust nted a 
ardens at te: for the purpose of 
are 
Royal G 
xchange with ther a Lr teem Although I Lycopods 
P 
11 s, 
5 
lend £ 4) 2a tal 
ped eee 
” The scarlet: Oaks 
m Sa moreover, thr rge together in the incon s and will 
mnal re 
splendid autu 
ded 
vane that qiy gf appe: Con sidering 
ohne that exists among Ferns, and the dis- 
views of the diletta A a AET botanists who 
plants, i st desirable ‘i some 
of nomenclature hoai? ve established and re 
We recognise the pear iy of Mr. Smith 
practi tical | convenience, and w e shall | 
ll future 
reg 
is a great 
A ae 
DA 
We have received parts 3 and 4 of Mr. Woas 
ble Chi arii e entirely occu 
ts, f 
large inp of it to grow in, oo of regen age, eris 
sand asa substrat 
p! ry a eat ara a is supp! lied to 
such as prefer it, like the Deodars, pot a ate and | 
is retained for the Ara „The jt 
fania a ov “elie, with which on always 5 mingis 
rsed a ong an nd scattered behind them, 
d to the Oaks and 
Thorns the walk advances, and they carry us to the 
nnel which divides the essa from the Rhododen- 
ost of these are more cto paes 
s they ee do not E thrive 
Still, they are 
canaden 
farther what is meant by the 
a Compositæ, an: 
any of th e plants ‘placed so 
to our Siya ot "itis "Viora of the South American 
Beg 
each o 
to paced for 20 or 30-9 years. 
are likely 
their 
ew number 
Flora of T Tasmania Ae lhe been iss 
sist wholly of Composites ; the let 
ae. 
e 3d) of Dr. Hooker’s oy tifu 
ssued, The pla sh 
terp into 
pee eres da 
distances | 
out 
here ae Roca cand the outsides of the clusters to 
complete the yt grea of natural Iness and cay 
mE 
fina par be 
fro! 
a P 
li 
tones = a key-stone, 
Garden 
BIDDULPH GRANGE, RESIDENCE 0 
MAN, Esq. (Continua ‘from p. 711. a te tr ‘transition 
or are left qui te blank, 
from the rridor | and 
attached 
with a ‘ine „open open winding walk i 
a +} 
- each 
an exqui 
filled with dwarfer and very ral plants, for = 
ety, r 
mound to the north co 
me 
On h 
ih aaien of the Tai recurva, var. 
whieh ie laid down cimri ere 
elene ‘ooking SET like a $ tke Wrdinar Lay fountain 
Mr. und tha 
an has 
oneither side ; Knypersly Church, two Aan hse 
making the central point in cae view. The 
=. left i is fitted u up, exteriorly, towards the 
the 
cro es fn icing somo a 
pretke sorts, P. Benthamiana, m macrocarpa, 
hi. 
rth growing + 4 it that a variety above Gea 
pact in its growth, and always 
tnt and perfect. A number of plants of the same 
several 
erkeeed ae 
species in this division. P. insignis is of piere 
ape 
kind, togeth ith th al d : 
coath, Bia meas old A style, | kin gether wi e original species, an St EG De wake 
Se taal pi ter. back of the two “principal: specimens, and in their been sunk a good deal below the natural leve l, the 
Pin re. : r3 “31 es lot, Grass nor 
ful n a id them, 
Perhaps pov alg variety | any ordinary kind n would grow upon 
Sree he coui Tt is AOINE “i pa er dil at ge elegant Thujopsis: borealis, | To srt nen lig the soy se, and 
ha sing mae win mina eenia TEGE mieh ical ad br pani ea are on ie cous rugged pre of Oaks 
mes Sait at ae sribed, } ont sisi alors ODE a species. related to a iane been kept dared ng roe hare Doen 
a t Pae S ity, | stue stuek into the banks in i —— = 
h e) 
skirta th ere, i 
r i i pen They all appear to be 
suming room, and finally returns to the terrace oppo- | so some Chinese plant, thoroughly hardy; Wittmanniana, tes mixed with 
. dru nd a few shoots each 
te the library window. Being the rei and most whieh no's pot ae A pre a habit ; Ps J. drupacea, a — ee ue bege vied Sar Kena 
and aj and changes its line in a particularly ea y ; J Sa ir (J. Sabina), | and they present = degres of, appropriate- 
ser Aap: 3 elt Al tga DE N for th “jem ine ngre: ‘oe u „and ¢ ead roots ‘or stumps could at 
Sieg id aaa tie esl; ae tank a a smear MEA tena pre I OE E E 
